(MoneyWatch) Newly minted shares of Facebook (FB) started trading at 11 a.m. Friday, sending investors scrambling for a piece of one of the hottest IPOs to ever hit the tape. CEO Mark Zuckerberg opened the NASDAQ exchange remotely Friday morning from the company's Menlo Park, Calif., headquarters. Priced at $38 per share but expected to zoom higher in the early going, the offering could raise $18.4 billion for the social networking web site.
The offering price also means the company is valued at $104 billion -- and that's before any runup in the share price. Even the opening sticker price makes Facebook the biggest-ever valuation by an American company at the time of its offering and the second-largest U.S. IPO ever behind Visa.
Watch: FB ticker on the NASDAQ
On CNET: Liveblogging the IPO
On CNET: Liveblogging the IPO
At the $38 share price, Facebook ranks as the 36th company in the world, just above French petroleum company Total, and the 23rd largest U.S. company, as measured by stock market value (number of shares outstanding multiplied by the stock price). That makes it larger then Amazon.com and Cisco Systems. It doesn't rank quite so high when it comes to sales, however -- Facebook is 909th in terms of annual revenue.
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